The new ranking method devours "hidden" statistics to provide an objective ranking of the world's top soccer players, soccer-loving scientists announced Wednesday, via a study in the journal PLoS ONE.

Like any die-hard fan, Luís Amaral loves to compare favorite footballers' performances. Unlike other fans, though, he has a professional interest in understanding how teams work—especially winning teams, whether they be in the World Cup or in scientific research.

"A team can be working really well, but we're not able to get at how much each team member is contributing," explained Amaral, a professor of chemical and biological engineering at Northwestern University.

"We want to be able to quantify the contribution of each one of the team members," he said, describing both soccer and social network analysis.

Unlike, say, baseball, soccer is short on measurable stats. Among other things, scoring is limited, which can, for example, hide the impact of players who win balls from opponents or set up winning plays with essential but unglamorous passes.

But an unprecedented number of statistics were collected during the 2008 UEFA European Football Championship, whose final is probably the closest thing to a European Super Bowl.

Charting each pass, the UEFA data provided Amaral with a golden opportunity. His team wrote software to crunch the stats and map "flow networks," the routes the ball takes from player to player.

"We could do computer simulations on these paths and figure out what are the paths through [certain] players that have better chances of resulting in shots or goals," he said.

The more times the ball went through a player and eventually resulted in a shot, the better that player's performance. (Goalies are excluded from the rankings.)

Big international tournaments like Euro 2008 and the World Cup draw hundreds of experts from diverse backgrounds.

Each football critic of course has his or her own biases—as with Amaral's admitted love for his native Portugal. But the professor was delighted to see that pundits' rankings of the best soccer players closely matched the new system's results.

Three of the computer's top five Euro 2008 players were also named to the Team of the Tournament, a theoretical all-star team selected by a panel of coaches. Interestingly, Ramos, who topped the computer rankings, didn't make the all tournament team, though his teammate Hernandez did.

"During the World Cup, FIFA is putting these same statistics online, so anyone can see the passing matrixes," Amaral said. "We are in the process of repeating the study, and by Friday [June 18] we'll have something online rating the players from these matches." (See the researchers' latest World Cup 2010 player stats.)